When the owners of Casa Rasta in Beechview arrived to work on Friday morning, something didn't seem right.They soon discovered the canopy in front of the restaurant was out of place and there was a rock sitting in a potted plant. The window next to it was shattered.VIDEO: Watch David Kaplan's report"To come in the middle of the night when no one's around, that's pretty cowardly," said Missy Berumen, manager at Casa Rasta.This incident comes almost exactly a month after another restaurant owned by the Las Palmas group was vandalized in Brookline.Berumen is convinced the two incidents are related."Just because of the fact that there's four other businesses on this block, and ours was the only one that was hit," she said.Berumen says she was adamant that Pittsburgh Police keep both incidents in mind as they do their investigation.After the December 9 incident, community support was evident as hundreds came out to support Las Palmas. That support has shown Berumen that hatred is the minority."The community behind us, they're from everywhere, you know? Every color, every religion, every ethnicity. Being a minority anymore doesn't have anything to do with any of that, it's just how ignorant you want to be," Berumen said.The restaurant didn't skip a beat, staying open all Friday and Saturday.As for the rock, Berumen plans to keep it in the store as a reminder of the strength of the business and the minority community at large.

PITTSBURGH, Pa. —

When the owners of Casa Rasta in Beechview arrived to work on Friday morning, something didn't seem right.

They soon discovered the canopy in front of the restaurant was out of place and there was a rock sitting in a potted plant. The window next to it was shattered.

"To come in the middle of the night when no one's around, that's pretty cowardly," said Missy Berumen, manager at Casa Rasta.

This incident comes almost exactly a month after another restaurant owned by the Las Palmas group was vandalized in Brookline.

Berumen is convinced the two incidents are related.

"Just because of the fact that there's four other businesses on this block, and ours was the only one that was hit," she said.

Berumen says she was adamant that Pittsburgh Police keep both incidents in mind as they do their investigation.

After the December 9 incident, community support was evident as hundreds came out to support Las Palmas. That support has shown Berumen that hatred is the minority.

"The community behind us, they're from everywhere, you know? Every color, every religion, every ethnicity. Being a minority anymore doesn't have anything to do with any of that, it's just how ignorant you want to be," Berumen said.

The restaurant didn't skip a beat, staying open all Friday and Saturday.

As for the rock, Berumen plans to keep it in the store as a reminder of the strength of the business and the minority community at large.